rfi 2024-11-07 00:12:42



US Elections 2024

Donald Trump retakes US presidency in stunning comeback

Republican Donald Trump has defeated Democrat Kamala Harris to win the 2024 US presidential election after picking up the key battleground states of North Carolina, Georgia, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. Earlier, he pledged to “heal” the country as results showed the former leader headed for a stunning return to the White House.

Republicans have also taken control of the Senate. Harris, meanwhile, has cancelled her election night party.

Trump’s election as the 47th president of the United States marks an extraordinary comeback for a former president who refused to accept defeat four years ago, sparked a violent insurrection at the US Capitol, was convicted of felony charges and survived two assassination attempts.

With a win in Wisconsin, Trump has cleared the 270 electoral votes needed to clinch the presidency. That’s the same state that put him over the top when he won in 2016.

Philadelphia trauma surgeon says US gun violence can and must be tackled

Trump has claimed an “unprecedented and powerful mandate” to govern – promising the cheering crowd at his election night rally in West Palm Beach that his victory would “truly be the golden age of America”.

Harris, 60, had been hoping to become the first woman president in the country’s 248-year history – and the first black woman and person of South Asian descent to hold the office.

The Vice President has yet to speak following Trump’s victory. However, her campaign co-chair, Cedric Richmond, told supporters gathered at her election night event at Howard University that Harris would return to campus on Wednesday to “address the nation”.

Check out our blog for a recap of developments as they happened:


US ELECTIONS 2024

‘Worry’ in Ukraine at Trump victory at critical moment in war

Kyiv (AFP) – Donald Trump’s victory in US presidential elections has sparked anxiety on the streets of Kyiv at a decisive moment of the war as Ukrainian defences buckle under mounting Russian pressure.

Ukraine is reliant on foreign military aid – in particular from Washington – to hold out against Russia‘s invasion, launched nearly three years ago.

Natalia Pichakchi, who fled the southern city of Mariupol that is now controlled by Russian forces after a brutal siege in 2022, said she expected that crucial aid would begin to dry up.

“It’s worrying. It’s disturbing,” she told AFP.

“Something will change; there will not be the same kind of support as before,” she added.

Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky was quick to congratulate Trump on his “impressive victory” Wednesday, saying he hoped his presidency would bring “just peace in Ukraine closer”.

Yet Trump’s aides have suggested forcing Ukraine into territorial concessions by conditioning US assistance.

“I appreciate President Trump’s commitment to the ‘peace through strength’ approach in global affairs,” Zelensky wrote on social media.

“This is exactly the principle that can practically bring just peace in Ukraine closer.”

European leaders seek a common future at Budapest summit

‘Wait and see’

Trump, whose running mate JD Vance said he does not care about the fate of Ukraine, has boasted that he can quickly end the Ukraine war.

Behind closed doors, some Ukrainian officials have remained optimistic about a Trump presidency and have advocated a wait-and-see-approach.

That cautious optimism was echoed by Tetiana Podleska, who works in IT and speculated that future US support for Ukraine did not hinge entirely on who was president.

“I think his role is a bit exaggerated that he will drastically change something for the worse,” she said, conceding however that Trump was unlikely to improve Ukraine’s position in the conflict.

“It won’t change for the better, that’s for sure. But I don’t think it will stop completely,” she added, referring to American backing.

Olga Prykhodko, a teacher in Kyiv, said the election results underscored that Ukraine had to make even greater efforts at home to make sure it could prevail in the war.

“Because our lives, our country’s future is in our hands,” she said.

Yet she was still hoping that Ukraine’s allies abroad would make good on promises to stand with the war-battered country.

“I’m concerned that support could decrease, but I hope that reason and democratic principles will prevail in the world,” she told AFP.

Igor Stryzheus, a 52-year-old resident of the Ukrainian capital, was less upbeat about the outlook for Ukraine with Trump in the White House.

“It worries everyone. It worries the whole world – not only Ukraine,” he told AFP in central Kyiv.

“We’ll have to wait and see what happens next,” he added.


CRIME

Interpol says over 2,500 arrests made in human trafficking crackdown

Lyon (AFP) – Interpol said Wednesday that a six-day international police operation against human trafficking had led to more than 2,500 arrests and the rescue of over 3,000 potential victims.

The operation, called “Liberterra II”, took place between 29 September and 4 October and was the largest-ever operation against human trafficking and people smuggling by the global law enforcement organisation.

People rescued included minors forced to work on farms in Argentina, migrants in nightclubs in North Macedonia, people coerced into begging in Iraq or to serve in private households across the Middle East, Interpol said.

Raids led to the rescue of “3,222 potential victims of human trafficking and identified 17,793 irregular migrants”, it said.

Trial begins for eight accused in killing of French teacher Samuel Paty

In addition to police raids, authorities also reinforced strategic border points, monitored nearly 24,000 flights and deployed officers to known trafficking and smuggling hotspots, said the organisation, which is based in Lyon, France.

Nearly eight million checks were carried out against Interpol’s databases, and a total of 2,517 arrests were made during the week, of which 850 were specifically on human trafficking or migrant smuggling charges, according to the organisation’s preliminary figures.

“In their relentless pursuit of profit, organised crime groups continue to exploit men, women and children – often multiple times over,” said Interpol secretary general Jurgen Stock.

“The results of this operation highlight the vast scale of the challenge facing law enforcement, underscoring that only coordinated action can counteract these threats,” he said.


EU – MIGRATION

French court issues tough sentences in Channel smuggling trial

A French court has sentenced 18 people – mainly Iraqi Kurds – to prison terms of up to 15 years for organising a major migrant-smuggling ring that transported people across the English Channel in small, flimsy boats.

The trial, held in Lille, exposed the dangers and high profits of the illegal crossings from France to England.

The defendants were apprehended in a Europe-wide police operation in 2022, leading to dozens of arrests and the seizure of boats, life jackets, outboard engines, paddles, and cash.

The longest sentence of 15 years, along with a €200,000 fine, was given to 26-year-old Iraqi Kurd Mirkhan Rasoul, identified as one of the ringleaders.

Other sentences ranged from two to 10 years in prison.

“The defendants are not volunteers helping their fellow humans but merchants of death,” the prosecutor said, describing how boats were loaded “up to 15 times their theoretical capacity”.

“These sentences are obviously very severe,” said Kamel Abbas, a lawyer for one of the defendants already jailed in France. “That’s a testimony of the scale of the case, and of the intention to severely punish the smugglers.”

Most of the accused were not present in court for the verdicts. Some followed the proceedings remotely from prisons across northern France, while others were tried in absentia, with warrants issued for their arrest.

Fourteen of the defendants were Iraqi nationals, with the others hailing from Iran, Poland, France, and the Netherlands.

All except the French defendant were barred from remaining in France after serving their sentences.

  • Interpol says over 2,500 arrests made in human trafficking crackdown

Profit was ‘sole motive’

Craig Turner, deputy director of the British National Crime Agency (NCA), involved in the arrest of one of the defendants, said the network was one of the most prolific organisers of crossings.

“Their sole motive was profit, and they didn’t care about the fate of migrants they were putting to sea in wholly inappropriate and dangerous boats,” Turner said.

“We are putting more resources into disrupting and dismantling the criminal gangs behind it than ever before,” Turner added.

According to a statement from the NCA, the criminal network was making approximately €100,000 from each crossing.

  • EU leaders embrace foreign ‘return centres’ to counter illegal migration

Deadliest crossing

The trial comes in what has been a particularly deadly year for attempted crossings of the English Channel, one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes.

More than 31,000 migrants have made the perilous Channel crossing so far this year – more than in all of 2023 – though fewer than in 2022.

At least 56 people have perished in the attempts this year, according to French officials, making 2024 the deadliest since the crossings began to surge in 2018.

Despite French and British efforts to stop it, the route remains a major smuggling corridor for people fleeing conflict or poverty.

Migrants favour the UK for reasons of language, family ties, or perceived easier access to asylum and work.

  • Cross-Channel migrant crossings top 25,000 as UK government vows to ‘smash the gangs’

Tafficking ‘on par with terrorism’

Europe’s increasingly strict asylum rules, growing xenophobia and hostile treatment of migrants are also pushing many migrants north.

On Monday, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer called for international cooperation against smuggling gangs, likening the issue to a global security threat on par with terrorism.

Starmer told a conference of international police organisation Interpol that “people-smuggling should be viewed as a global security threat similar to terrorism”.

He added that intelligence and law-enforcement agencies should try to “stop smuggling gangs before they act” in the same way they do in counterterrorism operations.


Netflix

French, Dutch authorities raid Netflix offices in tax fraud probe

French and Dutch authorities have taken action against streaming giant Netflix, raiding the company’s offices in Paris and Amsterdam as part of an ongoing tax fraud probe.

French and Dutch authorities have been investigating Netflix over alleged tax fraud and off-the-books work, with searches conducted at various locations in France.

Netflix‘s Amsterdam headquarters for Europe, the Middle East and Africa was also targeted for a search by a team of officials from both France and the Netherlands.

“French and Dutch authorities have been cooperating on this criminal case for many months,” a judicial source told AFP on Tuesday. 

The investigation – which began in November 2022 – focuses on Netflix’s tax filings for 2019 through to 2021.

Last year, Netflix insisted that it complies with tax law in all countries where it operates, after the probes were revealed in a media report.

French outlet La Lettre A had reported that Netflix’s French operation was structured until 2021 so that all subscribers signed up with a Dutch subsidiary – thereby “minimising its tax bill”.

In 2019 and 2020, this setup allowed Netflix to pay less than one million euros in taxes, despite having around seven million subscribers in France.

Investigators are looking into whether Netflix continued to use this strategy to minimise its reported profits and thereby its tax bill, La Lettre A added.

  • France wants Netflix, Amazon to invest 25% of revenue locally
  • ‘Lupin’ star Omar Sy signs acting and production deal with Netflix

Tax optimisation

The French subsidiary reported very low operating margins compared to the US mothership in 2021 and 2022, the outlet said, paying just €6.5 million in tax on its profits in 2022.

But its practice of billing a large share of revenue to entities outside France represented a “tax optimisation strategy that is legal” under certain conditions, La Lettre A added.

Despite the investigation, Netflix remains a dominant player in the French market, with 10 million subscribers.

The company says it confirms with local laws on commissioning French content, paying the full rate of VAT and contributing to a film industry levy.

In 2023, it invested 250 million euros into French productions, including the popular series “Lupin”, which became a global hit.

Netflix earned over almost €9 billion in revenue worldwide from its 282 million subscribers from July to September this year, with net profit reaching just over €2 billion.

(with AFP)


EUROPE – SUMMIT

European leaders seek a common future at Budapest summit

Dozens of European leaders will be seeking to chart a more common future during a one-day summit hosted by Hungarian leader Viktor Orban in Budapest on Thursday. 

The transatlantic relationship was always set to change after the 5 November US presidential election, but the question remains whether that change will be seismic under Donald Trump. 

For summit host and ardent Trump supporter, Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban, all things were already crystal clear even as votes were still being counted. “Good morning, Hungary! On the way to a beautiful victory. It’s already in the bag!”

Other European leaders have been far more reticent. 

The impact of the US results could be felt for years to come, on issues including the war in Ukraine, the European Union’s trade relations with the rest of the world, migration, the Middle East wars and climate change. 

“All this is putting peace, stability and prosperity at risk in our region,” said the invitation letter to the leaders of the European Political Community, which unites almost 50 nations in Europe and its near neighbours, bar Russia and Belarus. 

‘Evaporation’ of US support for Ukraine

Among the leaders likely to attend on Thursday is Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who is expected to make another plea for more aid as his country fends off Moscow’s invasion.

The timing is laden with significance as Trump has vowed to end the war “within 24 hours” of being elected – something leaders in Kyiv interpret as an impending evaporation of US support with a Trump win. 

Not so long ago, such a meeting – which is also expected to include leaders from non-EU countries like Turkey, Serbia and the United Kingdom – would end with praise for European unity and a common political direction.

Yet with Orban as the host of the summit, friction is as good as assured. 

Orban, who has openly thrown his weight behind Trump and argued that the former president is a “man of peace,” predicted a Trump victory and suggested that civil and criminal cases against him were the result of a politically motivated US Justice Department – a common Trump refrain. 

  • Trump hosts Orban at Mar-a-Lago raising European concerns

Future of Europe

Having played the obstructionist for years within the 27-nation EU, Orban now holds the bloc’s rotating presidency, giving him a more prominent platform and making him the host of Thursday’s EPC summit, as well as another gathering of EU leaders on Friday. 

The presidency under Orban caused turmoil from day one, when he declared “Make Europe Great Again” the motto of his six months in charge.

It was a strikingly clear reference to his affection for Trump, which he followed up with unannounced visits to Moscow and Beijing, angering EU leaders who said he wasn’t acting on their behalf. 

In response to Orban’s self-styled “peace mission” many EU countries began boycotting presidency meetings in Budapest, or sending only lower-level bureaucrats rather than ministers.

However, no boycotts are expected for this week’s summits. 

  • Hungary’s Orban clashes with EU leaders over Ukraine, migration policies

While Orban has cast the result of US elections as determinative of Europe’s future – he’s even delayed passing Hungary’s 2025 national budget until after a new president is elected – not all EU leaders are comfortable with the bloc’s fate being so tightly bound up with the movements of American politics. 

Donald Tusk, the centre-right prime minister of Poland, said that Europe must forge a more independent path that is less sensitive to changes across the Atlantic. 

“Some claim that the future of Europe depends on the American elections, while it depends first and foremost on us, on the condition that Europe finally grows up and believes in its own strength,” Tusk said in the days before the summit.

“Whatever the outcome, the era of geopolitical outsourcing is over”.


Floods

France declares natural disaster zones for nearly 400 towns flooded in October

380 municipalities across France have been designated as natural disaster zones, according to a decree published in the Official Journal on Tuesday. This is mostly due to damage caused by exceptional floods that occurred from 16 to 20 October which particularly affected regions in the centre-east and the south of the country.

11 departments fall under the “natural disaster zone” designation, which will open the way to insurance compensation for people affected by last month’s floods.

380 towns were affected in Ardèche, Rhône, Loire, Alpes-Maritimes, Yvelines, Essonne, Lozère, Loire-Atlantique, Eure-et-Loir, Haute-Loire and Corrèze.

Almost all of the municipalities were affected by floods and mudslides over the same period from October 16 to 20 this year.

In total, more than a thousand people were evacuated; roads, railways and schools were closed and several thousand homes were deprived of electricity.

National weather bureau Météo-France said that flooding in Ardèche had been “the most intense ever recorded over two days since the beginning of the 20th century”.

Olivier Amrane, the president of the Ardèche departmental council said “we have never experienced a disaster of such magnitude”.

Millions of euros in damages

Meanwhile, France’s public insurance fund CCR estimated the cost of the floods 17 and 18 October in the centre-east, south-east and Ile-de-France to be somewhere between €350 million and €420 million.

The combination of heavy rainfall falling on already-saturated ground, after a rainier than normal month of September led to significant overflows in local rivers, the insurance agency said.

Natural disaster prevention fund takes centre stage in French budget debate

Last week, Météo France reported that just over a year’s worth of rain fell on France over the first ten months of 2024 – for the first time in 35 years.

On average, 940 millimetres of rain fell between 1 January and 29 October 2024, compared to 935 mm over one year, according to data from the institute, which uses the average rainfall between 1991 and 2020 as a reference.

“This excess rainfall is nevertheless not unprecedented in several regions,” the weather bureau said.

Corsica, as of 29 October, was still far from its average cumulative figure over one year with 20 percent less rainfall, while Normandy in the north clocked 11 percent less than its average.

Other regions, like Ile de France –where Paris is situated – saw a 20 percent increase in average rainfall.

Adaptation plan

French Minister of Ecological Transition, Agnès Pannier-Runacher warned that the increase in natural disasters goes hand in hand with climate change.

“I believe that today we must look at the situation head on. These are episodes that we are going to experience more and more regularly,” she warned on 18 October.

Climate change is driving record threats to human health, experts warn

On 25 October, Prime Minister Michel Barnier announced the launch of a two-month national consultation to complete France’s new adaptation plan to global warming.

The plan is designed based on the hypothesis of a warming of 4°C in France by the end of the century compared to the pre-industrial era (compared to 1.7°C at this stage ).

It includes 51 measures around five main areas: protecting population, insuring risks, adapting human activities, protecting natural and cultural spaces and mobilising public and private bodies.


US elections 2024

Philadelphia trauma surgeon says US gun violence can and must be tackled

The debate over gun control continues to divide the nation, with presidential candidates Kamala Harris and Donald Trump taking opposing sides. In 2022, the United States recorded 48,204 gun-related deaths, an average of one death every 11 minutes. But it is doctors like Jessica Beard, regularly faced with the carnage, who are calling for measures to deal with the issue.

In the heart of North Philadelphia, where gunshots echo far too frequently, Dr. Jessica Beard stands on the front lines of America’s gun violence epidemic.

As a trauma surgeon at Temple University Hospital, she regularly witnesses the devastating impact of firearms on her community.

But Beard is not just saving lives in the operating room. As Director of Research of the Philadelphia Centre for Gun Violence Reporting (PCGVR) she’s also leading ground-breaking research that challenges how we understand and report on gun violence in the United States.

In an interview with RFI, Beard reveals the complex web of historical racism, media narratives, and policy failures that contribute to the ongoing crisis.

From the lingering effects of “redlining” to the harmful impact of sensationalised news coverage, her insights paint a picture of a deeply rooted problem that defies simple solutions.

As the nation grapples with an issue that claims nearly 40,000 lives annually, Beard’s work offers a fresh perspective on how America might begin to heal its wounds.

RFI: You’re in North Philadelphia. Could you describe the situation with regards to guns?

Jessica Beard: This area around our hospital is a place where people get shot very frequently. And our hospital takes care of the largest number of people who are shot in the entire state of Pennsylvania.

We know from our research that gun violence risk is actually place-based, meaning that people who live in certain neighbourhoods and cities in the United States are more likely to get shot.

And our research shows that this is in part due to “redlining,” a racist practice that prevented black people from getting mortgages to own homes.

In Philadelphia, areas that experienced “redlining” are still the areas where people get shot today.

“Redlining” is not the only thing that’s contributing to community gun violence, but it’s a marker of systemic and structural racism and disinvestment in people and places.

US gun culture alive and kicking in battleground state of Pennsylvania

RFI: In Europe, people are alarmed to read about US school shootings and other gun incidents each year. How does this work in the American mind, how is it normal to be allowed to have weapons that can cause this kind of damage?

Jessica Beard: Gun culture has for a long time been a part of American culture. And I think it’s kind of hard to generalise about the relationship between gun ownership and gun violence.

In North Philadelphia, many of the people who get shot are shot with illegal firearms. Whereas in rural Pennsylvania, the problem largely is firearm suicide. And in fact, the numbers are pretty similar.

In rural Pennsylvania, gun ownership places you at risk of shooting yourself or harming yourself.

Research from the 1990s shows that women who live in homes with guns are more likely to be shot by intimate partner violence.

But unfortunately in the United States, because of political reasons, there was a ban on research on firearm violence. In the 1990s, Congress actually banned funding for gun violence research that might be meant to support restriction in firearm access.

That [ban] was lifted by President [Barack] Obama, and there’s been more and more investment in gun violence research.

Left-leaning gun owners look for alternatives in the US

RFI: Can you tell us more about your research into US media reports of gun violence?

Jessica Beard: We looked at local television news in Philadelphia and we collected 7,000 TV news clips, and watched a sample of them. We that most clips frame gun violence through the lens of crime. The majority of narrators are police. You will very rarely see somebody like me talking about gun violence on local TV news.

News reports focus just on a single shooting event without context, causes, and solutions, called “episodic” crime reporting.

When audiences view these reports, they tend to blame victims. They don’t see gun violence as preventable; they see it as inevitable. And in fact, our big concern is that racist stereotypes can be perpetuated both about the people and the places where gun violence happens.

We also asked patients who had been shot in the summer of 2021, a big peak in gun violence in our city, how they felt about news reports about their injuries.

They felt dehumanised by the “episodic” crime reports, they felt that their safety was being threatened when certain things were mentioned like the hospital that they were treated at, and they felt retraumatised by graphic content.

About 10 percent of these news reports actually contain a clip of the shooting event, which can be very traumatising to the people involved but also result in this normalisation of violence and a desensitisation to violence that I think American news audiences have.

France shares ‘grief’ and ‘rage’ following Texas school massacre

RFI: How are the two presidential candidates, Kamala Harris and Donald Trump different in their approach to gun violence?

Jessica Beard: Vice President Harris has started and is coordinating an Office for Gun Violence Prevention out of the White House, a federal move to identify and collaborate with doctors like me and other public health folks to support evidence-based interventions.

This Office urges Congress to ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, requiring safe storage of firearms, which should prevent unintentional injury, requiring universal background checks for all gun sales, eliminating gun manufacturers’ immunity from liability, and enacting the Safer America Plan, which would support community interventions to prevent gun violence.

We’re also hopeful now that the Surgeon General has declared gun violence to be a public health problem. And that the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control are funding gun violence research.

When it comes to firearm suicide and intimate partner violence, there are other policies that seem to prevent those. One of those is called Extreme Risk Protection Orders. So in states that have enacted ERPOs, as they call them, the rate of firearm suicide is lower.

An ERPO  would be that you go to a judge and you can ask for a temporary removal of firearms from a person that you think is at risk, maybe your loved one, for example.

We saw a spike in gun violence, related to the containment policies and related to Covid and loss of access to social supports for our communities. And our hospital saw double the rate of shootings following March 2020 and into 2021.

But we’re actually at an all-time low for shootings in our city now so we’ve seen that come back down which is a big relief.

RFI: And Trump? 

Jessica Beard: I haven’t seen any plans to decrease gun violence.

RFI: So what ideas do you have to improve the situation?

Jessica Beard: I’m most interested in preventing community gun violence. A community violence intervention is basically community outreach by credible messengers after a shooting to prevent retaliation.

So what that looks like at Temple [Hospital] is if someone gets shot, they come into the hospital and they receive social services, they can receive psychological care and referral, receive victim services.

The truth is that those programs are under-resourced and grant-funded. So my advice would be that those who care for people who are shot are funded in a way that is sustainable.

What also seems to work is investment in parks, green spaces, schools, and social services. We have neighbourhoods and parts of our cities that don’t have access to health care, social supports, and schools, so community investment is one of the main solutions to community violence.


France – Iran

Iran claims French couple imprisoned since 2022 ‘in good health’

Two French citizens detained in Iran since May 2022 are reportedly in good health and being held in good detention conditions, according to Iran, denying recent claims their condition was worsening.

Judiciary spokesman Asghar Jahangir told reporters in Tehran on Tuesday: “The two are… in good health, so any claim regarding their poor condition is denied,” citing a report from the authorities.

The spokesperson was referring to French couple Cecile Koehler and Jacques Paris, who were arrested on charges of espionage and will have their next court hearing on 24 November.

In October 2022, Iran‘s state television aired what it called “espionage confessions” by the two detainees.

The French government condemned the broadcast as “shameful, revolting and unacceptable”, labelling the pair as “state hostages”.

Family members of French nationals imprisoned in Iran appeal to the UN

Last month, dozens of people protested in Paris over what Kohler’s sister, Noemi Kohler, described as the couple’s “alarming” physical and psychological condition.

In an interview, Noemi Kohler said the couple – who are being held in the high-security Evin prison outside the capital – were “only allowed out three times a week that they almost never see the light of day and that they sleep on the floor, without mattresses”.

She also alleged their lawyers had never been allowed to visit them.

France pushes for ‘immediate release’

Jahangir, however maintains the couple “have been in contact with their relatives through the consulate”, adding that they “have all human and legal rights”.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot had previously met with families of French nationals detained in Iran, saying his government was pushing for their immediate release.

Another French citizen – identified only by his first name – Olivier, has been in detention since October 2022 and the French authorities have not released details of his case.

They are among several European passport holders in Iranian custody, some of them dual nationals.

French foreign minister receives families of citizens detained in Iran

This comes as Foreign Minister Barrot also praised the “courage” of a young Iranian woman who was arrested after publicly stripping as a protest against harassment by security agents, in a video that has gone viral on social media.

Speaking on France 2 broadcaster on Tuesday, Barrot expressed admiration for the woman, calling her “a symbol of resistance” and “an icon in the fight for women’s rights in Iran and wherever women’s freedoms are under threat.”

(with Newswires)


Nigeria

Nigeria frees 119 people charged with treason over cost of living protests

A Nigerian court freed 119 people including minors on Tuesday, after the authorities dropped charges against them arising from deadly protests in August against economic hardship.

The accused had faced charges including treason and inciting a military coup, and had been arraigned in batches of 76 and 43 last Friday.

One of the charges carried the death penalty.

“The case has been struck out and the 119 protesters have been released,” according to Deji Adeyanju, counsel to the protesters.

“Now we are asking for their rehabilitation and compensation by their various state governments.”

The country’s attorney general took over the case from the police and dropped the charges after bringing forward the matter due to be heard in January.

  • Nigeria anti-hardship protests turn deadly as police fire shots, tear gas
  • Nigerian president calls for end to violent nationwide protests

Presidential order

On Monday, President Bola Tinubu ordered the release of all minors detained during anti-government protests in August, and dropped the charges against them.

Information Minister Mohammed Idriss said that President Tinubu had directed the police chief to free the 40 minors remanded in custody after their trials began this month.

“[The] President has ordered the immediate release of all minors arrested by the police,” he told journalists in the capital Abuja.

The minors were arrested by the police and charged with treasonable offenses of intending to destabilise the country and inciting mutiny following their participation in nationwide End Bad Governance protests this August.

Amnesty International said at least 22 people died during the demonstrations in clashes with security forces. 

Health issues

Some of the minors collapsed in court in Abuja on Monday, fuelling condemnation by civil society groups, bar organisations and the general public.

A rights group said the minors have been held since August by the Nigerian police after participating in protests against worsening insecurity and deprivation in the country.

Scenes of young Nigerians fainting while in court over their involvement in widespread anti-government protests have sparked controversy over detention conditions and police violence.

Social media was awash with videos showing several youths, likely underage, sitting or lying on the courtroom floor, holding their stomachs while half-faint.

The clips generated backlash from both politicians and civil society.

“The footage reveals minors, some so weak that they could barely stand, others fainting from sheer exhaustion and lack of nourishment,” said politician Peter Obi, who unsuccessfully contested the 2023 presidential election.

“These children appeared visibly malnourished and starved,” he wrote on X.

 (with wires)


MIDDLE EAST CRISIS

France’s top diplomat returns to Israel amid calls for ceasefire, humanitarian law in Gaza

France’s foreign minister Jean-Noël Barrot is due in Israel and the Palestinian Territories seeking to press Israel to engage diplomatically to end the conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon after the US presidential election is over.

Barrot will travel to Israel and the Palestinian territories this Wednesday to call for a ceasefire in Gaza and “respect for international humanitarian law”.

Speaking on France 2 television, France’s chief diplomat declared: “France has a role to play in conveying messages, and that is why I will be going to Israel and the Palestinian territories tomorrow evening to meet the authorities and humanitarian actors, to convey France’s voice in this region where the war has already gone on far too long”. 

“Violations of international humanitarian law are unacceptable and must stop”, he stressed, as Israel is accused of numerous human rights violations in its war against Hamas in Gaza.

France – Israel tensions

Israel has also banned the activities of UNRWA – the UN agency for Palestinian refugees – which it accuses of complicity with Hamas, provoking an international outcry.

His visit comes at a time where tensions between Israel and Paris have spiked in recent weeks, following statements by President Emmanuel Macron calling for a halt of arms sales to Gaza and accusing Israel of “sowing barbarity”.

However, Barrot insists: “Dialogue has never been broken off”.

This will be his second visit to Israel after first travelling to the country to mark the anniversary of 7 October Hamas attacks last month.

  • France pays tribute to 7 October attack victims, families
  • Israel slams Macron as a ‘disgrace’ over French arms fair ban

US plays ‘essential role’ for peace

When asked by France 2 whether a win for former President Donald Trump could boost Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Barrot replied: “The United States plays an essential role in ending the Israeli-Arab conflict … we are alongside the US – notably on Lebanon – to propose peace formulas to ensure a lasting peace in the region.”

Paris and Washington pushed for a temporary ceasefire between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah in September, but those efforts fell through.

Since then, Washington has done little to raise pressure on Israel to end its operation in Lebanon. 

Barrot said Paris would work with whoever won Tuesday’s vote.

He pointed to former US Republican President Ronald Reagan’s suspension of some weapons deliveries to Israel after its 1982 invasion of Lebanon as an example of how Washington could still do more.

“The war has lasted far too long and the use of force must give way to the use of dialogue and diplomacy,” Barrot said.


US elections 2024

US gun culture alive and kicking in battleground state of Pennsylvania

The Second Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees the right to bear arms, and about a third of American adults say they own a gun. At the same time, in response to rising gun death rates and mass shootings, the US surgeon general in July took the unprecedented step of declaring gun violence a public health crisis. RFI went to a fair for fans of firepower in the countryside of Pennsylvania to find out who is buying.

A modest yellow board at the roadside with the words “Gun Show – This Weekend” and an arrow underneath is the only sign that gives directions to this month’s weapon fair in Quarryville.

Deep in rural Pennsylvania, the Solanco Fairgrounds that host the fair are reachable via the PA272 from Lancaster – a road often blocked by the horse carts of local Amish, a strictly religious local group that rejects most forms of modernisation.

On the parking lot, large pick-ups stand in a row, and fair-goers flock through the narrow doorway that gives access to the venue.

The Quarryville gun show is organised by Eagle Shows, which is responsible for over 50 fairs yearly in some 16 cities in Pennsylvania alone.

Philadelphia trauma surgeon says US gun violence can and must be tackled

An entry ticket costs only $8 (€7,35). Vendors who want to sell arms or weapons-related equipment pay $50 for a table, which makes Quarryville the cheapest venue; other venues charge up to $110 for a table.

On its website, Eagle Shows says it want visitors to “enjoy your Second Amendment rights” at the shows, where “virtue, liberty, and independence will be on full display” and which are the “perfect place to pick up your next firearm”.

The show doesn’t like the curious. “Unauthorised recording or photography” are “prohibited” and “violators will be ejected”.

But inside, the atmosphere is friendly. A massive man with a beard and piercing eyes sells tickets and gives visitors a stamp on the back of their hand as proof of entry. A handwritten menu advertises hamburgers and fizzy drinks for a few dollars.

Groups of gun enthusiasts compare weapons, and swap stories. Every table has its specialisation: one promotes “ammo” with bullets in all sizes. Others have handguns, varying from classic Colt ’45s and Ruger Vaquero’s to smaller Berettas, lying in neat rows. Average price: $450 (€413).

One man sells antique Japanese rifles, and proudly shows a handgun, an imitation of a Nazi Luger pistol, with symbols of the Japanese Imperial Army.  “Very rare in this shape,” he says.

At another, table “master craftsman David Kline” sells handmade knives. “Inspired by Japanese skill, sharp as a razorblade” he boasts.

The large table with dozens of semi-automatic rifles attracts most of the attention. 

Old Don sells old hunting rifles. He frequents the gun shows. He also sells scopes, small hunting knives and an old manual for Remington rifles.

“I was in a US army base in West Germany in 1984 – best time in my life,” he says.

But he’s sceptical about the future of America. He doesn’t want to say which candidate in the US presidential election – Kamala Harris or Donald Trump – he favours. But he is clearly critical of Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric.

“We are a country of immigrants. Why stop the immigrants? If you ask any of the people here to go back to their roots, they’ll discover they come from somewhere else. Except for the native Americans. They are the real Americans. We should give the land back to them.” 

But his remarks strike a dissonant note in the staunchly pro-Trump atmosphere that is prevalent at the weapon fair. The walls are lined with “Trump-Vance 2024” posters, referring to Trump and his running mate “JD” Vance.

There’s not a single mention of Democratic candidate Kamala Harris or her running mate Tim Walz to be found at the Quarryville gun fair.

US elections: Who are the running mates for the key candidates?

One stand shows a poster inviting people to sign the “Second amendment petition” for the “protection of free speech and the right to bear arms”.

The Second Amendment to the US Constitution

“A well regulated Militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

Ratified by the US Congress on December 15, 1791.

According to one pro-Trump campaigner sitting next to the table, a muscular man in his thirties wearing a T-shirt with the words “know your roots” on it, Space-X and Tesla multi-billionaire Elon Musk is behind this initiative.

“For every petition signed, we receive $47 from Elon,” he says happily. “He is a visionary. In two centuries, there will be statues of him on Mars.”

Pressure groups such as the National Rifle Association (NRA) and the Gun Owners of America have asked Congress to “vote down every bill, every treaty, every resolution, and every amendment that would infringe upon my Second Amendment freedom as guaranteed in our Bill of Rights”.

According to the FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), Pennsylvanians collectively bought a staggering 841,523 guns in 2023, ranking the state fourth on a national level, behind Texas, Florida and California.

However, in terms of per-capita gun ownership, Pennsylvania, the country’s fifth most populous state, ranks 21, with “only” 859 gun purchases per 10,000 people in 2023. At the top of that list are Montana, Wyoming and Alaska with some 1,500 guns per 10,000 inhabitants each.

In fact, nationwide, gun sales decreased in 2023. The FBI report shows that some 16.7 million firearms were sold in the US last year – 4 percent less than in 2022.

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Pennsylvania’s gun purchases dropped by 7 percent in 2023, according to the report. 

Nonetheless, an advisory published in July by the US surgeon general declared gun violence a “national health crisis,” and suggested initiatives to prevent firearm deaths. According to the report, the rate of firearm-related deaths “reached a near three-decade high in 2021″.

The Pennsylvania gun crowd doesn’t seem to mind about the anti-gun rhetoric.

“It’s still not easy to buy a gun here,” says Don, with an air of disappointment. “It entails a lot of paperwork.”


US elections 2024

US heads for tight presidential vote as Harris, Trump wrap up campaigns

In the grand finale to her election campaign, Vice President Kamala Harris rallied thousands of supporters in Philadelphia Monday night, underscoring Pennsylvania’s crucial role in the 2024 presidential election. Former president Donald Trump simultaneously campaigned across Pennsylvania with events in Reading and Pittsburgh.

Harris’ star-studded event at the iconic Benjamin Franklin Parkway featured performances by Lady Gaga, The Roots, and Ricky Martin – the third stop in the battleground state of Pennsylvania on election eve.

The Democrat delivered her final pitch to voters beneath the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, made famous in the movie Rocky, where she said “the momentum is on our side”.

The high-stakes gathering drew massive crowds, with lines stretching back to Logan Square, reflecting Pennsylvania’s potential to determine the next occupant of the White House.

“I expect to have a woman president,” says Caroline, who is pushing her way through the crowds at the entrance of the venue. “It’ll be the first time in the United States, and we are way behind the rest of the world.”

Laureen, also in the crowd “isn’t too sure who is going to win.” She feels uncertain about election day. “It happened once. It can happen again,” she says, referring to a possible Trump victory.

Outside the venue, metres away from a row of policemen sitting on all-terrain motorbikes, there’s a noisy group of pro-Palestine demonstrators, banging a drum and singing rap through a microphone.

US elections: Who are the running mates for the key candidates?

“Kamala is not on our side,” reads a slogan on one of the boards the demonstrators hold up, “We won’t go for genocide.” The group of around eight people wearing Palestinian flags demand “end to US aid to Israel,” and ask people not to vote for her. But most onlookers just glance at them, and then walk on.

Bernard is impressed by the the huge turnout at the rally, but he would have preferred Michelle Obama, the wife of former president Barack Obama, to run. “People respect Harris. But they love Michelle,” he says.

Trump worries him. “I’ve never seen this kind of people power in my life, He’s the most skilled politician. Look what he’s gotten away with – 34, 36 felony convictions. Who gets away with that?

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For his last day of campaigning, Republican Trump started off in North Carolina and finished in Michigan, but he spoke in Pennsylvania’s Reading and Pittsburgh in between.

“With your vote tomorrow, we can fix every single problem our country faces and lead America, and indeed the whole world, to new heights of glory,” he told supporters.

Harris and Trump each got three ballots in the tiny community of Dixville Notchin in the northeastern state of New Hampshire, which for decades has kicked off Election Day at the stroke of midnight Monday – hours before the rest of the country.

Polls open on Tuesday morning at 07:00 AM and close at 08:00 PM. Americans will then gather in front of their televisions, in bars or in clubs, to watch the results streaming in from across the country.


Champions League

Lille boss Genesio rallies injury-hit team ahead of Champions League Juve clash

Lille boss Bruno Genesio urged his injury-ravaged squad to recall their past exploits in this season’s Champions League as they host a Juventus side on Tuesday night led by the former Paris Saint-Germain midfielder Thiago Motta.

Lille sit in 15th place in the 36-team league with six points from their three games.

On 23 October they won 3-1 at Atletico Madrid. And at the beginning of the month they beat holders Real Madrid 1-0.

The feats were unexpected after they lost their opening game to Sporting 2-0.

“What I’ve told the players to remember is that each Champions League game is different,” said the 58-year-old Frenchman.

“But what is common in all of them is that you need to concentrate and maintain your levels of intensity. It’s absolutely crucial for these sorts of matches.

In the prelude to the game at the Stade Pierre Mauroy, Lille – who have eight senior players out with injury – drew their Ligue 1 match against Lyon 1-1 to stay fourth. Juventus won 2-0 at Udinese on Saturday to move to within four points of Serie A pacesetters Napoli.

“It will be a tough match against Juventus,” Genesio added. “But the games against Atletico Madrid and Real Madrid were difficult too.

“Juventus are very well organised tactically and there are a lot of players who can create something out of nothing.

“But we’re at home, in front of our fans who’ll give us lots of support. And what’s also important is that we remember that we’ve beaten two top teams to get the six points.

“And if you can do it twice you’ve got to believe that it can be done again.”

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Motta, who bossed the middle of the park for PSG between 2012 and 2018, concurred.

“I’m not surprised Lille are where they are,” said the 42-year-old former Italy international.

“Bruno Genesio sends out teams who play well collectively and who can keep the ball. So I’m not impressed … because I knew very well what he’s capable of. We will have to play really well to get a result at Lille.”

Monaco, the other Ligue 1 club in action on Tuesday night, boast seven points from their three games and play at Bologna.

Adi Hütter’s men go into the tie in Italy on the back of two defeats in Ligue 1 which have allowed champions PSG and Marseille to surpass them.

“Of course that’s been disappointing,” said Monaco defender Wilfried Sinigo. “But that’s football, it can happen. But if we manage to beat this Bologna team, it will boost our morale for the next matches.”

In other clashes in the Champions League on Tuesday night, Real Madrid host AC Milan,  the Premier League pacesetters Liverpool entertain the German champions Bayer Leverkusen and Sporting Portugal take on Manchester City.


Social media

Parents in France take TikTok to court over self-harm content aimed at children

Seven families have filed a joint legal complaint against TikTok in France, accusing the video platform of exposing their teenage children to content about suicide, self-harm, eating disorders and other mental health problems that they argue encouraged them to hurt themselves.

The parents accuse TikTok of contributing to “the worsening of their children’s physical and mental health”, their lawyer Laure Boutron-Marmion told Franceinfo radio. 

She filed a civil lawsuit on their behalf at a court outside Paris on Monday, she announced, describing it as the one of the first in Europe to aim to force the Chinese social media network to take legal responsibility for potentially harmful content served up by its algorithm.

One of the plaintiffs, the mother of a girl who turned to TikTok when she was subjected to bullying, told Franceinfo: “The algorithm picked up on her search style and suggested other content that went from bad to worse, about depression and cutting.

“TikTok amplified her unhappiness, flooding her with content that teenagers her age should never see.”

Legal campaign

Two of the families lost their adolescent children to suicide, while the others say their teenagers attempted to end their lives or suffered eating disorders. 

The seven families form part of a collective, Algos Victima, founded by Boutron-Marmion earlier this year to pursue legal action in France against social media companies for allegedly failing to protect young users. 

The lawyer has already filed a case against TikTok for “incitement to suicide” over the death of a 15-year-old girl who took her life in 2021 after posting on the platform about her struggles as a victim of bullying. 

Her parents, who have also joined the collective suit, say her videos prompted the algorithm to show her content about self-harm that, they believe, contributed to her suicide.

France admits ‘failures’ in prevention of teen bullying, suicides

France has so far done little to study or regulate the potentially harmful effects of social media, Boutron-Marmion told legal news site Actu Juridique in April. 

She is calling for companies to moderate content liable to influence vulnerable users, for example by systematically hiding content about suicide. 

But first and foremost she hopes that suing social media giants will place more scrutiny on their practices. Having the opportunity to debate their lawyers in public will be a victory in itself, she said, “since getting a hearing with a social networking platform is almost impossible these days”.

Rabbit-hole effect

The European Union opened an investigation in February into whether TikTok does enough to protect minors.

The EU said it was concerned that the app’s design could lead users to become addicted to it or be drawn into a spiral of potentially harmful content.

Amnesty International has documented what it calls the rabbit-hole effect of TikTok’s algorithm, with research finding that users who show an interest in videos related to mental health are quickly recommended content about depressive thinking, self-harm and suicide in a bid to hold their attention.

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TikTok’s guidelines ban showing or promoting suicide, self-harm or disordered eating, while the app says that content related to weight loss, drug and alcohol use, sex, gambling and other potentially risky behaviour is restricted to users over 18. 

In its latest update on the steps it takes to moderate content within the EU, the company says it removed more than 22 million pieces of content and banned over 5 million accounts for breaking its rules between January and June this year.

Most of the offending videos are removed by automated moderation systems, it said, while some 6,000 people are involved in moderating content in the EU’s various languages.  


EU-CHINA TRADE

France says still ‘open’ to negotiation over China’s brandy tariffs

France’s foreign trade minister has said the window for negotiation with Beijing over tariffs on European brandy remains open but warned Paris could take “all possible measures” in response.

In October, Beijing announced provisional tariffs on European Union brandy imports, part of an escalating trade row between Beijing and Brussels.

Most Chinese imports of the spirit come from France and the country’s cognac makers have begged Paris to put an end to the spat, describing themselves “hostages”.

Speaking to journalists in Shanghai on Monday, French Foreign Trade Minister Sophie Primas said: “France is in favour of negotiations, obviously. We are not in an escalating trade war, so we need to enter negotiations.”

This followed an hour-and-a-quarter-long meeting Primas had with China’s commerce minister Wang Wentao on Sunday evening ahead of a major trade show.

Primas underlined that she had told Wang France was prepared “to take all possible technical and legal measures”.

“We don’t want it to come to that,” she stressed.

“The window for negotiation… is clearly open,” she said, adding that she expected high-level talks to take place soon.

EU – China tariff spat

In a post on social media, Primas said she had conveyed “one simple thing” to Minister Wang: “Europe refuses trade escalation, continues its exchanges, but will not yield to pressure on essential points.”

France maintains that the measures against brandy are political, designed to put the European Union under pressure after the bloc imposed tariffs of up to 35.3 percent on Chinese electric vehicles over unfair competition claims. 

The EV measures reportedly featured prominently in Primas and Wang’s discussions.

A second phase of consultations over the measures between the EU and China recently began.

“France, as an important member state of the EU, should play an active role in urging the European Commission to show sincerity,” Wang was quoted as saying in a readout from his ministry.

Beijing files WTO complaint over EU’s new taxes on Chinese EVs

As well as the provisional brandy tariffs, Beijing has also launched anti-dumping probes into some European pork and dairy imports.

Brussels is also investigating Chinese subsidies for solar panels and wind turbines.

Primas said she had come to China with a message of “both openness and firmness”. 

“Our manufacturers and farmers have been working with China for a very, very long time… we want these bilateral relations to continue to exist and to continue to grow and strengthen,” she said. 

“On the other hand… we have firm positions in favour of acting in a commercial world of free competition and under fair and reciprocal conditions,” she said. 

(With wires)


Literature

African writers celebrated with prestigious French literary prizes

French-Algerian writer Kamel Daoud on Monday won France’s top literary prize, the Goncourt, for a novel set during Algeria’s civil war between the government and Islamists in the 1990s. His main rival was Burundi-born Gaël Faye, who was Monday handed the prix Renaudot, another coveted prize. 

The jury needed just one round of voting to award the coveted prize to Algerian writer Daoud for his novel Houris about what has become known as Algeria’s “black decade”.

Daoud reacted on social media by dedicating the prize to his deceased father and his mother, who is still alive, but who no longer remembers anything, thanking them for their support, and posting a photo of his parents.

The writer – the first Algerian to win the Goncourt in France – is known for stirring controversy with his analyses of society in Algeria and elsewhere in the Arab world.

The title Houris is a reference to beautiful, virginal companions for faithful Muslim men in paradise. It tells the story of a young woman who loses her voice when an Islamist cuts her throat as she witnesses her family being massacred during the civil war.

She later shares her experiences with her unborn child through an internal monologue.

 “With Houris, the Goncourt Academy has crowned a book in which lyricism duels with tragedy and which gives a voice to the suffering linked to a dark time in Algeria, especially for women,” said Goncourt president Philippe Claudel.

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However, the subject appears to challenge Algeria’s continuing reluctance to address the civil war from 1992 to 2002 in public.

The conflict between Islamist groups against the Algerian army killed tens of thousands of people, with some estimates as high as 200,000.

Since then, Algeria has implemented a charter for peace and national reconciliation, which prohibits the evocation of the “wounds of the national tragedy”.

The novel is banned in Algeria and its French publisher Gallimard was blocked from this month’s Algiers international book fair.

Banned in Algeria

Publishing Houris was only possible “because I came to France”, Daoud told reporters. “Because this is a country that granted me the freedom to write,” said the 54-year-old who left his Algerian home city of Oran for France “because of circumstances” and was given citizenship.

Daoud became known internationally for his 2013 debut novel The Meursault Investigation, a retelling of Albert Camus’ The Stranger, from an opposite angle. He won the First Novel category of the Goncourt prize with this book.

In 2016 – following numerous cases of sexual assault on women by Arab migrants in Cologne, Germany – he wrote an op-ed piece published in the New York Times called “The Sexual Misery of the Arab World”.

He said that “in some of Allah’s lands, the war on women and on couples has the air of an inquisition”, concluding that “sex in the Muslim world is sick”.

Algerian writer wins world French literature prize

From Algeria to Rwanda

Daoud’s main rival for this year’s edition was Gaël Faye; writer, composer and rapper, 42, whose novel Jacaranda deals with the rebuilding of Rwanda after the 1994 genocide.

Faye was handed the Prix Renaudot, another coveted prize awarded during the French literary competition season, on Monday while losing the Goncourt to Daoud.

Jacaranda is the second novel by Faye, born in Burundi to a Rwandan mother and a French father, who has lived in Kigali for about ten years.

Like his previous one, Petit Pays, (Small country) this novel retales the lives of Rwandans in the shadow of the massacres of 1994.

The prestigious prizes usually spark book sales in the hundreds of thousands for the winning authors.

Released in 2016, Faye’s first novel Petit Pays won, among other prizes, the Goncourt des lycéens, then sold 1.5 million copies, got translated around the world, has been adapted into a comic book, and later a film.

President Emmanuel Macron, congratulated both writers on social media platform X, saying that “thanks to their voices, our French language expresses beauty, tragedy and universality even better”.

 (with newswires)


Mozambique

Mozambique opposition chief says he escaped assassination attempt

Mozambique’s leading opposition politician, Venancio Mondlane, claimed in a video this Monday to have escaped an attempted assassination in South Africa where he had taken refuge after last month’s disputed elections.

Mondlane rejects the results of the 9 October elections that the electoral authority says were won by the candidate of the Frelimo party, in power since 1975.

He claims he won and has used social media to call for protests and strikes.

“When I was in South Africa, assassins were at my door to kill me,” Mondlane said in the video on Facebook. “I had to jump out the back door, slip out through a hair salon and run with my bags and my family.”

Mozambique’s ruling party hangs on to power in contested election

He said he had been staying in Johannesburg‘s upmarket Sandton area and had since left the country. He did not say when the alleged assassination attempt was meant to have occurred.

South Africa’s foreign ministry told French news agency AFP it had no knowledge of Mondlane being in the country and that such a matter should have been reported to the police.

After his lawyer and another associate were gunned down on 19 October as they prepared to challenge the results in court, Mondlane said they were assassinated and he could be next.

Mozambique‘s electoral authority announced on 24 October that Frelimo’s Daniel Chapo had won the election with more than 70 percent, compared to Mondlane’s 20 percent.

In two days of protests directly after the announcement, security forces killed at least 11 people and more than 50 others suffered serious gunshot wounds, Human Rights Watch said last week.

Mondlane has called a march in the capital Maputo on Thursday, which he said is to be “the day of Mozambique’s freedom”. It will be the culmination of a seven-day strike he called last week.

Mozambique opposition calls strike amid election fraud claims and assassinations

Police used tear gas Monday to disperse more than a dozen demonstrators on a main road in Maputo, according to AFP reporters in the capital.

Mozambique anti-corruption NGO, the Center for Public Integrity said last month’s elections were the country’s most fraudulent for 25 years.

Election observers, including from the European Union, have also noted serious flaws before, during and after the vote, with the electoral body accused of manipulation to keep Frelimo in power.

 (AFP)


PARIS OLYMPICS 2024

Paris Olympic ‘cleanup’ saw over 19,000 people evicted: report

Nearly 20,000 people were evicted in the Ile-de-France region between April 2023 and September 2024, in the run-up to and during the Paris Olympics, according to a report drawn up by a collective of French NGOs. 

In a report released this Monday, the Revers de la médaille collective reported that 260 “informal” living sites – camps, shanty towns and squats – were cleared between 26 April 2023 and 30 September 2024.

Over the same period, at least 19,526 people were evicted from their homes – an increase of 33 percent compared to between 2021 and 2022.

The report also highlighted the number of minors on the streets has increased significantly, with at least 4,550 children evicted from their dwellings – three times more than during the 2021-2022 period.

In a recent post on social media, the collective documented the eviction of minors from their camp in the tunnel near Paris’s Les Halles shopping district, stating: “Police but no solution. The wandering continues”. 

‘Stain’ on Olympics legacy

Paul Alauzy, coordinator of Médecins du Monde and spokesman for the collective referred to the past year as exceptional in terms of the number of evictions.

Alauzy said the rise in evictions would leave an “indelible stain” on the legacy of the 2024 Olympics. 

Prior to the Paris Olympics, the collective pushed for a round of consultations with all the parties involved in organising the Games.

The aim was to draw up a joint plan for the Olympics that would help combat social exclusion and deliver on Paris 2024’s promise of an unprecedented positive social legacy.

However – despite numerous meetings and a series of concrete proposals with figures – no concerted plan was ever drawn up.

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With a view to the hosting of the Olympics in the future, the associations are recommending the “systematic consultation of host populations, access to balanced, free and high-quality information, and the organisation of open consultations with civil society much earlier than the Games”.

“The simple fact of organising the Games every year in the same place … rather than inviting the whole world to go [to the host city] for such a short time could address many problems, from social cleansing to gentrification and ecological factors,” the collective added.


Obituary

Tributes roll in for beloved musician and producer Quincy Jones, who died at 91

Music industry titan Quincy Jones, who produced some of Michael Jackson’s best-known albums and collaborated with legends including Frank Sinatra and Count Basie, has died aged 91. 

He was surrounded by family at his home in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Bel Air at the time of his death on Sunday, his publicist Arnold Robinson said in a statement that did not specify a cause.

“Tonight, with full but broken hearts, we must share the news of our father and brother Quincy Jones’ passing,” his family said, according to the statement. “And although this is an incredible loss for our family, we celebrate the great life that he lived and know there will never be another like him.”

A jazz musician, composer and tastemaker, his studio chops and arranging prowess connected the dots between the 20th century’s constellation of stars.

From Frank Sinatra to Michael Jackson, jazz to hip-hop, Jones tracked the ever-fluctuating pulse of pop over his seven-decade-plus career – most often manipulating the beat himself.

Boundless love

“Through his music and his boundless love, Quincy Jones’ heart will beat for eternity,” his family said.

Born in 1933 on the south side of Chicago, Quincy Delight Jones Jr. discovered a knack for the piano at a recreation center and became teenage buddies with Ray Charles.

Jones briefly studied at the Berklee College of Music in Massachusetts before joining bandleader Lionel Hampton on the road, eventually relocating to New York, where he gained attention as an arranger for stars including Duke Ellington, Dinah Washington, Count Basie and, of course, Charles.

He played second trumpet on Elvis Presley’s Heartbreak Hotel, teaming up with Dizzy Gillespie for several years before moving to Paris in 1957, where he studied under the legendary composer Nadia Boulanger.

‘Black Lives Matter’, and songs are showing it’s a fact

Jones later expanded into Hollywood, scoring films and television shows.

Among entertainment’s most decorated figures, Jones won virtually every major achievement award, including 28 Grammys.

In 1967, Jones was the first Black composer to be nominated in the original song category of the Oscars, for the film Banning.

Tributes

Musicians and music lovers paid tribute to Jones overnight on social media. 

“An icon”, wrote South African anti-apartheid hero Sipho Mabuse, “no musician of his generation moved so effortlessly —collaborating with everyone from Frank Sinatra to Michael Jackson to Miles Davis. What a remarkable career and brilliance.” 

Among other tributes was one from British actor Michael Caine, who was born on the same day as Jones, 14 March 1933, and his long-time friend. “My celestial twin Quincy was a titan in the musical world,” Caine wrote. “He was a wonderful and unique human being, lucky to have known him.”

In a post on Instagram, US rapper LL Cool J said Jones was “a father and example at a time when I truly needed a father and example. Mentor. Role model. King.”

Fearless

Jones started a label, founded a hip-hop magazine, and produced the 1990s hit television show The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, discovering Will Smith.

He also wrote his own hits, like the addictively cacophonous Soul Bossa Nova, while also arranging at a breathless pace for dozens of stars across the industry.

But he was perhaps best known as the producer of Michael Jackson’s albums Off the Wall, Thriller and Bad.

“You name it, Quincy’s done it. He’s been able to take this genius of his and translate it into any kind of sound that he chooses,” jazz pianist Herbie Hancock told PBS in 2001.

“He is fearless. If you want Quincy to do something, you tell him that he can’t do it. And of course he will  he’ll do it.”

(with AFP)

International report

Harris and Trump double down in Pennsylvania on eve of US election

Issued on:

As the United States stands on the brink of what many are calling the most consequential presidential election in recent history, the nation is focused on the battleground state of Pennsylvania, where both Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump organised last-day rallies. RFI’s Jan van der Made looks back at a campaign marked by unprecedented polarisation.

The bitter rivals embarked on a final frenzied campaign blitz Monday with both hitting must-win Pennsylvania on the last day of a tight and volatile US presidential election campaign.

Pennsylvania is the single biggest swing state prize under the US Electoral College system, which awards influence in line with population.

Republican Trump has promised a “landslide” as he seeks his return to the White House, while Democrat Harris said the “momentum” was on the side of her bid to be America’s first woman president.

Deadlock

But the polls suggest a different story on the eve of Election Day – total deadlock in surveys nationally and in the seven swing states where the result is expected to be decided.

The world is anxiously watching the election, which is set to have profound implications for conflicts in the Middle East and Russia’s war in Ukraine, and for tackling climate change.

Both sides say they are encouraged by early turnout numbers, with over 78 million people having voted already, around half of the total number of ballots cast in 2020.

No middle ground

The closeness of the 2024 White House race reflects a deeply divided United States, as it chooses between two candidates whose visions could scarcely be more different.

Media outlets and political parties have poured millions of dollars into advertising campaigns that leave little room for middle ground.

This stark divide is a reflection of the American political system, where the winner-takes-all approach often marginalises third-party candidates and reinforces the dominance of the two major parties.

US elections: Who are the running mates for the key candidates?

 

As election day approaches, the spotlight has fallen on undecided voters who may ultimately tip the scales in this tight race.

Campaign volunteers have been working tirelessly, engaging directly with potential voters in an effort to sway opinions and drive turnout.

To discuss what is at stake, RFI’s Jan van der Made spoke to analyst J. Wesley Leckrone, Chair Political Science Widener University, Daniel Hopkins, Political Scientist University of Pennsylvania and Daniel Laurison, Associate Professor Sociology at Swarthmore College and former campaigner for Barack Obama.

International report

Turkey eyes US presidential race that stands to shake up mutual ties

Issued on:

With the presidential election in the United States only days away, Turkey is watching the vote closely. While Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan enjoyed a close working relationship with Donald Trump when he was president, analysts warn that a second term for Trump wouldn’t come without risks for Ankara.

Erdogan has avoided commenting on the US election, but Ankara sees the outcome of the 5 November vote as key for Turkish-US relations.

Each of the contenders, Vice-President Kamala Harris and Trump, are expected to take significantly different approaches to Turkey’s long-time leader.

“During the past Trump presidency, the political relationship at the highest level between Erdogan and Trump was a strong one,” says Sinan Ulgen, head of the Centre for Economics and Foreign Policy Studies, an Istanbul think tank.

Ties with President Joe Biden have been notably less friendly, however, if Harris were to win the relationship with Erdogan is likely to be a much more shallow one, Ulgen believes.

Face-to-face time

Erdogan met Trump nine times during his 2017-21 presidency, including on a state visit to Washington.

In contrast, he met Biden only briefly on the sidelines of international summits, with US-Turkish relations mainly conducted at foreign-minister level.

“Erdogan has been in power for more than 20 years and Biden is the only US president who has refused to meet him in an official capacity, either in the US capital or in the Turkish capital,” says international relations professor Serhat Guvenc of Istanbul’s Kadir Has University.

“For Erdogan, leader-to-leader talks are key to achieving his goals. And probably, he thinks deep down that he can sort out many things through personal contact, connections or personal engagement.”

Such interaction, especially with the most powerful person in the world, is also seen as vital to Erdogan’s status at home.

“It’s very important for his domestic standing and legitimacy,” says Asli Aydintasbas, a political commentator and visiting fellow at the Washington-based Brookings Institution.

“He has built a personalised system but also convinced voters, particularly his base, that he is a consequential leader, that Turkey is rising, that he is very important, he is on par with the US president and the Russian president, that everybody is looking up to Erdogan.”

Turkey and Russia closer than ever despite Western sanctions

Lack of chemistry?

Aydintasbas questions how easy it would be for Erdogan to develop a relationship with Harris, even if she were ready to engage more directly than Biden.

“I cannot imagine what type of chemistry Harris and Erdogan would have. They don’t come from similar backgrounds. It’s difficult to imagine the two developing a very close personal relationship, to be honest,” the analyst says.

Erdogan has often spoken warmly of his relationship with Trump – despite the fact he got hit by sanctions during his time in the White House over the detention of an American pastor, prompting the Turkish lira to crash in 2018.

Trump once even vowed to “totally destroy and obliterate” the Turkish economy over Turkey’s threats to attack US-backed Syrian Kurdish forces.

“We have memories of the threats and sanctions,” warns Murat Aslan of the pro-government Seta Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research in Ankara.

Invoking the 2018 crisis, Aslan said: “Rather than words, I think deeds are important.”

Erdogan hopes a U-turn can salvage Turkey’s floundering economy

High-risk candidate

The Middle East is another potential sticking point.

Trump is calling for more support for Israel in its wars against Hamas and Hezbollah, and analysts say differences could again emerge between the US and Turkish leaders.

“Trump’s approach to the Middle East and the conflict between the Palestinians and Israel could actually escalate the tension in the Middle East to the extent that a regional war could be unavoidable,” warns Ozgur Unluhisarcikli, who directs the German Marshall Fund’s office in Ankara.

“So yes, a Trump presidency has many opportunities for Turkey – but at a very high risk.”

Meanwhile, though there has been little direct contact between Biden and Erdogan, Turkish-US relations have shown signs of improvement in recent months.

With the two Nato allies increasingly cooperating and better managing their differences, Aydintasbas suggests, there are merits for Ankara to both candidates.

“A Kamala Harris administration would mean more continuity, but the promise of stability in Turkish-US relations,” she says. “Whereas Trump is so unpredictable that it could be very good one day, very bad one day.”

With the Middle East war continuing to rage, Trump’s unpredictability remains a risk to Ankara – but Erdogan will likely still covet the opportunity to renew his relationship with the US strongman.

The Sound Kitchen

Caught in the act, or political harassment?

Issued on:

This week on The Sound Kitchen you’ll hear the answer to the question about Marine Le Pen’s embezzlement trial. There’s “The Listener’s Corner” with Paul Myers, Erwan Rome’s “Music from Erwan”, and of course, the new quiz and bonus questions too, so click on the “Play” button above and enjoy! 

Hello everyone! Welcome to The Sound Kitchen weekly podcast, published every Saturday – here on our website, or wherever you get your podcasts. You’ll hear the winner’s names announced and the week’s quiz question, along with all the other ingredients you’ve grown accustomed to: your letters and essays, “On This Day”, quirky facts and news, interviews, and great music … so be sure and listen every week.

It’s time for you to start thinking about your New Year’s resolutions for our annual New Year’s Day show. If you’ve already made up your mind about what you’ll aim for in 2025, go ahead and send it to us … if not, be sure you send us your resolution – or resolutions if you are really ambitious! – by 15 December.

Mark your calendars now for 12 December, 6 PM Paris time – that’s when the winners of the ePOP video competition will be announced, live on the ePOP Facebook page. My good pals Max Bale and Gaël Flaugère, who run the Planète Radio department that sponsors ePOP, invited me to come on the show and talk to you for a few minutes, in English. So plan to stay up late or get up early on 12 December, beloved listeners! And we are so pleased that “one of our own” has made it into the running: Saleem Akhtar Chadhar, the president of the RFI Seven Stars Listeners Club, is one of the 10 nominees in the RFI Clubs category! 

Erwan and I are busy cooking up special shows with your music requests, so get them in! Send your music requests to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr  Tell us why you like the piece of music, too – it makes it more interesting for us all!

Facebook: Be sure to send your photos to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr for the RFI English Listeners Forum banner!

More tech news: Did you know we have a YouTube channel? Just go to YouTube and write “RFI English” in the search bar, and there we are! Be sure to subscribe to see all our videos.

Would you like to learn French? RFI is here to help you!

Our website “Le Français facile avec RFI” has news broadcasts in slow, simple French, as well as bilingual radio dramas (with real actors!) and exercises to practice what you have heard.

Go to our website and get started! At the top of the page, click on “Test level”. According to your score, you’ll be counselled to the best-suited activities for your level.

Do not give up! As Lidwien van Dixhoorn, the head of “Le Français facile” service told me: “Bathe your ears in the sound of the language, and eventually, you’ll get it.” She should know – Lidwien is Dutch and came to France hardly able to say “bonjour” and now she heads this key RFI department – so stick with it!

Be sure you check out our wonderful podcasts!

In addition to the breaking news articles on our site, with in-depth analysis of current affairs in France and across the globe, we have several podcasts that will leave you hungry for more.

There’s Spotlight on France, Spotlight on Africa, The International Report, and of course, The Sound Kitchen. We also have an award-winning bilingual series – an old-time radio show, with actors (!) to help you learn French, called Les voisins du 12 bis

Remember, podcasts are radio, too! As you see, sound is still quite present in the RFI English service. Please keep checking our website for updates on the latest from our journalists. You never know what we’ll surprise you with!

To listen to our podcasts from your PC, go to our website; you’ll see “Podcasts” at the top of the page. You can either listen directly or subscribe and receive them directly on your mobile phone.

To listen to our podcasts from your mobile phone, slide through the tabs just under the lead article (the first tab is “Headline News”) until you see “Podcasts”, and choose your show. 

Teachers take note! I save postcards and stamps from all over the world to send to you for your students. If you would like stamps and postcards for your students, just write and let me know. The address is english.service@rfi.fr  If you would like to donate stamps and postcards, feel free! Our address is listed below. 

Another idea for your students: Br. Gerald Muller, my beloved music teacher from St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas, has been writing books for young adults in his retirement – and they are free! There is a volume of biographies of painters and musicians called Gentle Giants, and an excellent biography of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., too. They are also a good way to help you improve your English – that’s how I worked on my French, reading books that were meant for young readers – and I guarantee you, it’s a good method for improving your language skills. To get Br. Gerald’s free books, click here.

Independent RFI English Clubs: Be sure to always include Audrey Iattoni (audrey.iattoni@rfi.fr) from our Listener Relations department in your RFI Club correspondence. Remember to copy me (thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr) when you write to her so that I know what is going on, too. N.B.: You do not need to send her your quiz answers! Email overload!

This week’s quiz: On 30 September, Marine Le Pen – the leader of the French far-right party the National Rally – along with her father and 25 colleagues went on trial over alleged misappropriation of European funds.

They’re accused of using European parliamentary funds to pay for assistants, who actually worked for her National Rally party, formerly called the National Front, rather than on European affairs.

If found guilty, Le Pen could face a maximum of ten years behind bars and a 1 million euro fine – and a possible five-year ban on standing for public office. 

You were to re-read our article “French far-right leader Marine Le Pen on trial for misuse of EU funds”, and send in the answer to this question: How many euros has the European Union Parliament estimated that Le Pen and her colleagues in the National Rally party allegedly embezzled?

The answer is, to quote our article: “The EU Parliament estimated in 2018 that 6.8 million euros had been embezzled. Marine Le Pen has always denied any wrongdoing.”

In addition to the quiz question, there was the bonus question: “Can you remember the first time you received new clothes from your parents?”, which was suggested by Ratna Shanta Shammi from Naogaon, Bangladesh.

Do you have a bonus question idea? Send it to us!

The winners are: RFI Listeners Club member Deepita Chakrabarty from New Delhi, India. Deepita is also the winner of this week’s bonus question. Congratulations, Deepita, on your double win!

Also on the list of lucky winners this week are Hasina Zaman Hasi, a member of the RFI Amour Fan Club in Rajshahi, Bangladesh, and RFI Listeners Club members Nasyr Muhammad from Katsina State, Nigeria, as well as Sakawat Hossain from Sylhet, Bangladesh.

Last but assuredly not least, RFI English listener Bidhan Chandra Sanyal from West Bengal, India. 

Here’s the music you heard on this week’s programme: “Hadouk” by D. Malherbe and L. Ehrlich, played by Kosinus; “The Entertainer” by Scott Joplin, performed by the composer; “The Flight of the Bumblebee” by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov; “The Cakewalk” from Children’s Corner by Claude Debussy, performed by the composer, and “We Swing (The Cypher)” by Jean Baylor, Marcus Baylor, Eric Scott Reed, Keith Loftis, and Dezron Douglas, performed by The Baylor Project.

Do you have a music request? Send it to thesoundkitchen@rfi.fr

This week’s question … you must listen to the show to participate. After you’ve listened to the show, re-listen to Melissa Chemam’s 18 October Spotlight on Africa podcast, “Ghana grapples with crisis caused by world’s throwaway fashion”, or re-read her article of the same name, both of which will help you with the answer.

You have until 25 November to enter this week’s quiz; the winners will be announced on the 7 December podcast. When you enter be sure to send your postal address with your answer, and if you have one, your RFI Listeners Club membership number.

Send your answers to:

english.service@rfi.fr

or

Susan Owensby

RFI – The Sound Kitchen

80, rue Camille Desmoulins

92130 Issy-les-Moulineaux

France

Click here to learn how to win a special Sound Kitchen prize.

Click here to find out how you can become a member of the RFI Listeners Club, or form your own official RFI Club.   

Spotlight on Africa

Cultural exchanges beyond borders as African art gains global interest

Issued on:

African contemporary arts are attracting increasing interest thanks to a packed season stretching from Europe to Africa. Artists and curators from across the continent and the diaspora reflect on the impact of cultural exchanges beyond their borders – from London to Paris, Luanda to Dakar.

October and November are set to host a series of events celebrating African art across the continent, in Europe and even farther afield.

Spotlight on Africa dives into perspectives from diverse African cultures, focusing on the voices and visions of the diaspora.

RFI journalists Ollia Horton and Melissa Chemam take us to the heart of two major art fairs: Paris’s Also Known As Africa (AKAA) and London’s 1:54 Contemporary African Art Fair.

Listeners will hear from Victoria Mann, founder and director of AKAA, and founder of La Maison Gaston gallery, Christelle Clairville, whose work brings Caribbean influences to the dialogue around African identity.

French-Belgo-Congolese artist Tiffanie Delune, exhibiting in London, shares her journey through the art world.

Curators Grada Kilomba and Helio Menezes weigh in from the Sao Paulo Biennial in Brazil. Meanwhile, ahead of the Dakar Biennale, French-Algerian artist Dalila Dalleas Bouzar discusses her preparation and the importance of the event to her work.


Episode mixed by Hadrien Touraud and Erwan Rome.

Spotlight on Africa is a podcast from Radio France Internationale.

International report

UN rapporteur says Israel’s war in Gaza is ’emptying the land completely’

Issued on:

A year of war in Gaza has undermined international law and threatens to make the strip uninhabitable, according to the United Nations special rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories, Francesca Albanese. She tells RFI why she is making the case for Israel’s offensive to be classified a genocide.

More than 1.8 million Palestinians in Gaza are experiencing extremely critical levels of hunger, according to the UN. Seventy percent of crop fields and livelihoods have been destroyed during the Israeli military offensive.

The war, which has claimed 42,000 lives in Gaza and left hundreds of thousands wounded, has also spread to the West Bank and Lebanon. Civilians as well as UN peacekeepers have been targeted by Israel’s forces.

“I used the word ‘catastrophe’ for the first time back in October 2023,” Albanese told RFI, “when Israel had killed 8,000, 6,000 people in the first weeks of the conflict and destroyed entire neighbourhoods, bakeries, churches, and targeted UN buildings and universities.

“This is not the way wars are conducted.”

Albanese was speaking as she prepared to launch her latest report on the situation in Gaza and the other Palestinian territories, which she presented to the UN General Assembly earlier this week.

In it, she takes a long view of the current conflict, arguing that Israel’s military actions form part of a systematic attempt to displace Palestinians that goes back decades – and which she calls a genocide.

“Israel occupies that land, according to the International Court of Justice, unlawfully,” Albanese said. 

“So Israel unlawfully occupies a territory, oppressing its people, who of course retaliate. Then they wage a war against them. It doesn’t work that way.”

Hamas attack, one year on – a view from Gaza

‘Emptying the land’

Albanese acknowledges the deadly violence inflicted on Israelis by the attacks of 7 October last year, and she has advocated for the investigation and prosecution of crimes committed against civilians by Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups.

But she warns that the trauma of 7 October has deepened Israeli animosity towards Palestinians and spurred calls for vengeance, providing the government with an opportunity to escalate its actions in the occupied territories with the goal of making them unliveable.

“As we speak, Israel is running extermination raids neighbourhood per neighbourhood in the areas that were already forcibly evacuated, ethnically cleansed of nearly 1 million people in northern Gaza,” Albanese told RFI.

“Only 400,000 people remained, who have been starved, abused and bombed. What the people in Gaza have gone through is really unspeakable, and now it is emptying the land completely.”

Hamas attack, one year on – a view from Israel

Israel and UN at odds

The war has brought Israel’s already tense relations with the United Nations to a low point, with the Israeli parliament this week approving a controversial bill to ban the UN’s agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA – considered a lifeline for Gaza – from operating on Israeli territory.

Israel claims many of the agency’s staff belong to Hamas or other terrorist groups, and accused some of them of involvement in the 7 October attacks.

The UN says it investigated the allegations and identified problems with neutrality, but no proof of terror links. It warns that restricting UNRWA will have a devastating effect on aid supply chains into Gaza.

More broadly, UN leaders have called for a ceasefire and denounced starvation, mass displacements, atrocities, war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Albanese has proved an especially controversial figure, calling for the UN to consider suspending Israel as a member state over its actions. 

Her stance has drawn accusations of bias and antisemitism from Israel’s allies, notably the United States, which cancelled a briefing she was due to give the US Congress this week.

Washington and others argue that Israel has the right to defend itself – though Albanese questions whether its military operations are truly making it safer.

“Is it protection?” she asked. “How is what Israel is doing going to make its citizens protected? This is the question. And the blindness at the political level is mind-blowing.”

International report

Egypt and Turkey’s closer ties spark hope for peace among Libya’s rival factions

Issued on:

The recent rapprochement between Egypt and Turkey, long-standing supporters of rival factions in Libya, offers a potential pathway to easing tensions in the North African country.

Libya resumed oil exports this month after a pause caused by a dispute over control of the country’s central bank, which oversees oil exports.

“This was a serious crisis,” said Jalel Harchaoui from the Royal United Services Institute. “And while it’s partly fixed, there are still issues that need attention.”

The row between Libya’s two rival administrations which led to the temporary halt, was only resolved by intense negotiations, but Harchaoui claims the conflict’s repercussions continue.

Newly reconciled, Turkey and Egypt could be a force for stability in Africa

“A lot of players, including armed groups in Tripoli, are trying to take advantage of whatever has happened over the last several weeks. So I’m not describing a scenario of war, but I’m describing a more volatile environment,” he said.

Turkish-Egyptian relations

However, a recent rapprochement between Egypt and Turkey could offer hope of easing Libyan tensions.

“We agreed to consult between our institutions to achieve security and political stability,” pledged Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi at a press conference last month in Ankara with his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Libya once was a point of Turkish-Egyptian rivalry, with Cairo backing the eastern Libyan administration in Benghazi of Khalifa Haftar and Ankara supporting the western Tripoli-based Government of National Unity. Now, Egyptian-Turkish collaboration is key to resolving the latest Libyan crisis.

“Both countries can push the Tripoli-based government at least to accept something or come to the least terms that they can agree,” said Murat Aslan of the SETA Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research, a pro-Turkish government think tank. “So it’s a win-win situation for both Egypt and Turkey.”

Economic crises

With both the Turkish and Egyptian economies in crisis, the economic benefits of cooperating in Libya are seen as a powerful force behind the country’s rapprochement and Libyan collaboration.

Fighting between rival militias in Libya kills dozens

“These two countries are very important to one another,” said Aya Burweila, a Libyan security analyst

“They’ve figured out a way to divide spheres and work together. Even in the east now, Turkish companies have cut lucrative deals, infrastructure deals, just as Egypt has.

“So economy and money drive a lot of these political friendships and reapportionment.”

Ankara is looking to Cairo to use its influence over Hafta to support an agreement it made with the Tripoli-based Government of National Unity to explore widely believed energy reserves in Libyan waters.

Libya’s stability at greater risk with turmoil in Niger and Sudan, UN warns

At the same time, Cairo is pressing to remove Ankara-supported Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh of Libya’s Government of National Unity. Despite differences, Harchaoui says Cairo and Ankara are committed to cooperation.

“What has already been decided is that they are going to speak and they are going to speak on a daily basis,” said Harchaoui.

“And then at every crucial moment, they are going to make sure and Turkey, specifically, is going to make sure that Egypt is on board.

“But we need more tangible results from the dialogue that has already been in place,” he added.


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Madhya Pradesh: the Heart of beautiful India

From 20 to 22 September 2022, the IFTM trade show in Paris, connected thousands of tourism professionals across the world. Sheo Shekhar Shukla, director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, talked about the significance of sustainable tourism.

Madhya Pradesh is often referred to as the Heart of India. Located right in the middle of the country, the Indian region shows everything India has to offer through its abundant diversity. The IFTM trade show, which took place in Paris at the end of September, presented the perfect opportunity for travel enthusiasts to discover the region.

Sheo Shekhar Shukla, Managing Director of Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board, sat down to explain his approach to sustainable tourism.

“Post-covid the whole world has known a shift in their approach when it comes to tourism. And all those discerning travelers want to have different kinds of experiences: something offbeat, something new, something which has not been explored before.”

Through its UNESCO World Heritage Sites, Shukla wants to showcase the deep history Madhya Pradesh has to offer.

“UNESCO is very actively supporting us and three of our sites are already World Heritage Sites. Sanchi is a very famous buddhist spiritual destination, Bhimbetka is a place where prehistoric rock shelters are still preserved, and Khajuraho is home to thousand year old temples with magnificent architecture.”

All in all, Shukla believes that there’s only one way forward for the industry: “Travelers must take sustainable tourism as a paradigm in order to take tourism to the next level.”

In partnership with Madhya Pradesh’s tourism board.


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Exploring Malaysia’s natural and cultural diversity

The IFTM trade show took place from 20 to 22 September 2022, in Paris, and gathered thousands of travel professionals from all over the world. In an interview, Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia discussed the importance of sustainable tourism in our fast-changing world.

Also known as the Land of the Beautiful Islands, Malaysia’s landscape and cultural diversity is almost unmatched on the planet. Those qualities were all put on display at the Malaysian stand during the IFTM trade show.

Libra Hanif, director of Tourism Malaysia, explained the appeal of the country as well as the importance of promoting sustainable tourism today: “Sustainable travel is a major trend now, with the changes that are happening post-covid. People want to get close to nature, to get close to people. So Malaysia being a multicultural and diverse [country] with a lot of natural environments, we felt that it’s a good thing for us to promote Malaysia.”

Malaysia has also gained fame in recent years, through its numerous UNESCO World Heritage Sites, which include Kinabalu Park and the Archaeological Heritage of the Lenggong Valley.

Green mobility has also become an integral part of tourism in Malaysia, with an increasing number of people using bikes to discover the country: “If you are a little more adventurous, we have the mountain back trails where you can cut across gazetted trails to see the natural attractions and the wildlife that we have in Malaysia,” says Hanif. “If you are not that adventurous, you’ll be looking for relaxing cycling. We also have countryside spots, where you can see all the scenery in a relaxing session.”

With more than 25,000 visitors at this IFTM trade show this year, Malaysia’s tourism board got to showcase the best the country and its people have to offer.

In partnership with Malaysia Tourism Promotion Board. For more information about Malaysia, click here.